Subject: AATA
I was in turn saddened by Adrian Tribe's message. It is definitely a bad thing that trained conservators are paid so little, both for their personal well-being and for the quality of their work. The struggle not only for higher personal pay, but for enough support money to pay for proper supplies, equipment, and reference materials is a constant one, but conservators have often been so self-sacrificial that we may as a profession need to change our tactics. Being modest in one's demands does not gain a person many brownie points in today's world. AIC is trying in many different ways to upgrade both actual professionalism in our field and at the same time boost our standing among related professionals and in the public eye, and I hope other country's organizations are trying to do the same. I don't know who Adrian Tribe works for, but if appropriate, she or he should consider being a little more pushy; if the quality of work is being affected by the lack of resources, this is a serious matter. I have no idea about the state of libraries in the UK as to inter-library loans, on-line accessibility, etc., but it is certainly important that the British--and all of us--not give up on accessibility to written information sources. Perhaps the DistList could be used to increase access by discussing availability, helping to share, etc. As chair of the AIC Publications Committee, I can say that AIC is trying very hard to get more people to publish---by providing grant money for people to write books, and by encouraging more submissions to juried publications. It is indeed disheartening if such material, once published, has limited circulation because of a lack of funds. AATA is trying to make better use of limited resources by encouraging libraries rather than individuals to purchase AATA, but we all understand that libraries too are suffering from lack of funding. If conservators in a particular area could get together and let libraries know that group of them would like certain books or journals, perhaps that would help. I would welcome more open discussion of the matter of difficulty of access to published material; if this is a recurrent problem, perhaps the professional organizations can find a way to address it. Barbara Appelbaum *** Conservation DistList Instance 9:67 Distributed: Thursday, March 28, 1996 Message Id: cdl-9-67-002 ***Received on Wednesday, 27 March, 1996